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tv   The Rachel Maddow Show  MSNBC  March 25, 2013 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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him in the shower, thinking about, this is a man that has seen the entire world. but everything. and he starts painting himself naked in the shower, this small, secluded, bizarre, private, exiled world. >> i think you wrote, he is chased and untouched. even when alone, we see his knobby knees and his toes, peeking up above the running water. do you think that speaks to a certain amount of introspection and/or loneliness? >> it occurred to me that there's introspection, but no dark night of the souls. there's thinking about yourself, but basically, just sitting in the bathtub. i loved that he paints this private scene, that he paints in his weight room, in a baseball cap. he's very relaxed about doing this. the signature, signing 43, is phenomenal. he has a very peculiar way of seeing the world. he really looks at these dogs, it's like he really knows dogs. but there's almost no psychology to the dogs. the same way -- he's a bit of an outsider artist, in a way, the same way he was a bit of an
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outsider president. >> let's talk about the dogs. to me, painting 50 dog portraits says something about one's personality. does that say to you that he's just perfecting a certain style? does it speak to an obsession? is barney his muse? >> well, i think it might be all of the above or maybe a discomfort with people. the idea of being alone. the idea of being private. the idea of these dogs being surrogates for himself or karl rove or whoever they're supposed to be. but he's obviously really good at painting them. i wish he would paint more self-portraits. i think his landscapes are better. he's painted a couple of buildings, that you're looking at it from one wall and then another, and watermelons. i actually think the whitney museum of american art could give him a very small survey. i would write about it. >> jerry saltz, this may be george w. bush's greatest contribution to american society. thank you very much for joining us and your art expertise. that is all for now.
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i'm alex wagner. the rachel maddow show starts now. on a day when the news about politics and the nonpolitics just play news was in pretty high gear. on the eve of the supreme court hearing, those landmark cases on gay marriage starting tomorrow, the supreme court also announced today that it will take up new cases on the issue of affirmative action. they seem to be courting all the controversy they can in this session of the court. also, a new and interesting dynamic emerging on the democratic side of washington, d.c., politics, as we still do not know what the white house is going to do about the question
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of the keystone pipeline. but the outside group formed from the president's campaign operation, they have now given notice that they will be against keystone and they will fight it. outside environmental groups are also saying they have 50,000 people lined up, who have signed up and said they are willing to be arrested, protesting against keystone. also today, the secretary of state, john kerry, is on a surprise trip to afghanistan. he landed just hours after the u.s. handed over its prison, its main prison in that country, to the afghan government. that may not sound like the biggest deal in the world, but that prison was one of the most important sticking points to how and when we would finally end our war there and extricate ourselves from that country, so that is a really important political development. also in the face of continuing, withering, bipartisan criticism of the performance of the veteran's administration, particularly toward iraq and afghanistan veterans, we learned today that the chief of staff of that agency is leaving. announcing today that he will
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retire. we've also got new details ahead this hour in the murder of the prison's chiefs in colorado. also, the nation of cyprus has accepted its bailout, alleviating immediate fears of another european financial meltdown, but presumably, we'll just start fearing another one some time soon. also, i have to tell you that gonzaga last on saturday night, so my ncaa bracket is over and done with. and most amazingly, smu announced today that the george w. bush presidential library is almost ready to open. they have set a date. the george w. bush presidential library will open to the general public for the first time on the ten-year anniversary of the mission accomplished speech, in which president bush announced that the united states had prevailed and major combat operations in iraq were over. that was six weeks into a war that would go on for 8 1/2 more years after that. on the ten-year anniversary of mission accomplished, they're going to open the george w. bush presidential library, which is actually perfect. honestly, any had to pick a date, that would be the date i would pick. what could be more fitting? but we begin our show
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tonight with the historic civil rights cases that are going to be argued starting tomorrow in the united states supreme court. we now know what the ticktock will be like as far as how this gets argued. it starts at 10:00 a.m. eastern and the oral arguments in the case will last an hour. as always, there are no cameras in the courtroom. no still cameras and no video cameras. and there will be no live audio feed from the courtroom either. but we do know that the court plans to release the audio recording of the arguments not too long after they finish up tomorrow. so by this time tomorrow, right here on tomorrow night's show, we probably will have the audio tape of those arguments to play for you. the pro gay rights side of the case, the case that's arguing for striking down california's ban on gay marriage, that will be argued in part by this man, the nation's solicitor general, donnell furly. the obama administration has taken the pro gay rights side of this case, so it will be our nation's solicitor general making part of that side's oral argument. the other part of the pro gay
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rights oral argument will be made by this man, the former solicitor general from the last presidency, ted olson, theodore olson and probably the most recognizable conservative legal figure in the country who is not himself a supreme court justice. ted olson was george w. bush's solicitor general. me played the role of joe biden to prep paul ryan for the vice presidential debate this past presidential election. ted olson the bush versus gore debate. it's ted olson and boyce who he beat are both on the pro gay rights side of this case tomorrow. but it will be ted olson, the conservative one, who will actually standed up tomorrow in court and make the case, along side the solicitor general. it's kind of the definition of heavy hitters, right, when it comes to supreme court oral arguments? the solicitor general and the last solicitor general from the other side of the aisle. wow. now, that's the pro gay rights side.
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the anti-gay rights side, the other side of the case tomorrow, will also be argued in tomorrow's arguments the lawyer for the anti-gay side will get equal full-time and the lawyer on that side of the case is a man named -- chuck cooper. chuck cooper. chuck cooper. to the google, right? on the first page of google search results for chuck cooper, you will not find what you are looking for. the first results is this very nice website, i think we've got it, yes, for the broadway actor named chuck cooper. he is very talented, very famous on broadway. he is not the chuck cooper making the anti-gay rights argument at the supreme court tomorrow. other first page results for chuck cooper will teach you about the first african-american player to be ever drafted by the nba. an amazing history, an amazing biography. there is a foundation in his name, but he is not the chuck cooper making the anti-gay rights argument at the supreme court tomorrow. flip over to the second page of google search results, you will find chuck cooper the nature photographer from tennessee. he is also not the chuck cooper making the anti-gay rights
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argument, neither is the chuck cooper who is an insurance agent in mississippi, neither the chuck cooper who is a real estate agent in california, neither is the chuck cooper who is the wiring and cable manufacturer sales representative either. in order to get anywhere near anything useful about this chuck cooper who is making the anti-gay rights argument at the supreme court tomorrow, you must call upon the wikipedia disambiguation page, where you'll be able to narrow it down to, finally, that must be him, chuck cooper, former supreme court clerk, now a lawyer, most known for his bit part in the iran contra scandal. he's the one who testified that ronald reagan's national security adviser and a man named ronald north had all conspired to lie dong in the iran contra scandal. he also testified that oliver north had lied a bunch of other times and might lie under oath when called the next time. he was an assistant attorney
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general in the reagan justice department. and that, honestly, is sort of where he is indexed in our modern american history books. nothing against mr. cooper here. he is a very accomplished lawyer now. he's an accomplished litigator, arguing before the supreme court the no chopped liver. but this imbalance is kind of a microcosm for what's happening on this issue right now in our country. the pro-gay rights side, i mean, for one thing, they have essentially totally captured the democratic party. the president, the vice president, the other most prom meant democrat in the country who is not the president or vice president, hillary clinton, they are all on record emphatically for equal rights for same-sex couples. a lot of democrats had that position already. but all of the action now on the democratic side is among
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democrats who were not yet on board. today, two more centrist to conservative democratic senators came out in favor of same-sex marriage. senator claire mccaskill of missouri and mark warner of virginia. there are some relatively prominent democrats who are still trying the dodge the issue. hi, we can see you. but, honestly, if you talk to anybody who's taking these issues seriously, it is now officially inconceivable that the democratic party would say, nominate a presidential candidate in 2016 who doesn't believe in equal rights for gay people. it is a settled matter in the democratic party. so the pro-gay rights side has pretty much captured the democratic party. it's just a matter of sweeping up the last few and finding out if anybody's going to try to be the anti-gay maverick on this issue while still staying in politics and still staying in the party. my bet is no. not even you, mary landrieu. also, on the pro gay rights side, along with almost the entire democratic party, is a chunk of the republican party. the republican official's brief
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for the supreme court ended up with 131 names on it. everybody from paul wolfowitz, my buddy, to jon huntsman, to clint eastwood, to the romney for president campaign manager, to the secretary of the new hampshire young republicans. more than 130 republican officials and former officials. but even with that brief, and even if you go beyond just that brief to consider pro gay rights republicans who didn't sign on to that, but we still know their position, even with all of that, it is still a stretch to even say that there is a split in the republican party on this issue. i mean, of the 232 republicans in the house, precisely two are on record as pro equal rights for gay people. two out of 232. that is less than 1% of elected republicans in the house. in the senate, there are 45 republicans, precisely one of them is on record as pro equal rights for gay people. and that's brand-new for him. that's rob portman who just came out with that position two weeks ago, after saying that his son is gay. so one senator out of 45 and two representatives out of more than 200. that's not a split in the party, that's like a sliver of the party. that's maybe even a splinter of the party, among elected
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officials. but as with other social issues in republican politics right now, republicans are sort of getting to the point where they don't want to change their policy position on these matters, they just don't want to be known for what their policy position is on this matter. they just want people to stop noticing it. so even though the party platform for last year's election and the republican party chairman, reince priebus, and the speaker of the house, john boehner, and the supposedly modern new republicans like marco rubio, are all on the record now as still now rigidly anti-gay rights and not planning on changing, even as pretty much everybody active at high-level republican politics who is not named rob portman continues to stand firm against the threat of gay people having equal citizenship rights, at the same time, they mostly just don't want to talk about it. so you have this sort of incoherent thing going on, on the republican side or at least the anti-gay rights side of this question. we're at the point where the face of crusading anti-gay rights is an obscure lawyer from the iran contra scandal named chuck cooper who's not to be confused with the more well-known actor of the same name. to define somebody to be the face of the de facto position of the republican party, you've got
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to go to this guy. you've got to drag out old gary bauer like fox news channel did yesterday. you've got to drag out gary bauer to argue that people are not really in favor of marriage equality, the polls are skewed. gary bauer's argument on fox news sunday was that people, americans broadly really do secretly hate gay people, but they're lying to the pollsters about it. the same way they told the pollsters they would vote for barack obama and then on election day, they all showed their true unskewed colors and voted for governor romney. really, gary bauer? really, you're the best they've got? this is the de facto position of the republican party, but republicans don't want to argue for it. so you get gary bauer, you get old tony perkins there on cbs, making the same version of the gary bauer argument. the polls are skewed! you get rick santorum out there still, now running the issue like a racket in a way that would make newt gingrich proud. rick santorum is now sending out direct mail appeals, saying that if you send him $100, he will urge the supreme court to rule
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against gay marriage. because, presumably, rick santorum can't do that urging without your $100. he's running it like a racket. but this is what it's come to. it's a mess on the other side of this argument, from where david boyce and ted olson and the solicitor general of the united states will be arguing tomorrow. nobodies what legal direction the justices will take this in. and you can double that for the defense of marriage cases that will be argued the following day. we don't know yet how all of this will be move legally. but the politics surrounding this legal matter are increasingly weighty and predictable on the left. and on the right, they are increasingly incoherent and low-rent and even occasionally pathetic. does that imbalance in the
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politics here, does the fact that the spokesperson on the right on this issue is maybe gary bauer and the spokesperson on the left of this issue is the leading legal likes of both the republican and democratic party. does that imbalance, politically, affect expectations for how the court is going to hear and rule on this case? and should it? joining us now is kengy osheena, the chief justice of constitution until law at nyu law school. he'll be in the courtroom tomorrow to hear the legal arguments in the prop 8 case. professor osheena, thanks very much for being here tonight. >> it's great to be here, rachel. >> first of all, can you sum upper up for us, what is the basic question the court will be deciding tomorrow? >> there are two claims being made, constitutionally.
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one is the freedom to marry claim, which is under the due process clause of the 14th amendment. the other is an equal protection claim, which says there has to be equal treatment, regardless of what entitlement is on the table for same-sex couples as for opposite-sex couples. so the range of options that we have with those claims are, usually people frame it as 0 to 50. it's either no states or all 50 states. but there are actually three options in the middle. and i think that the court is most likely to do one of those threes. there are two ways to get to one state, a just california solution, we can talk about either of those. and there's an eight-state solution that says, there are currently eight states, will be nine when colorado does civil unions may 1st, but eight states that have everything but marriage. the argument there is, if you are giving all the rights and benefits and burdens of marriage to individuals but withholding only the word marriage, that's essentially a branding issue. it's a concern you'll tarnish the brand if you let gay people into the constitution. and that tarnishment claim is really is second class citizenship claim, so they could flip those and double the number of jurisdictions that have same-sex marriage. >> that would mean the states where same-sex marriage exists already would continue to have that, but it would not force other states that don't have
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those laws to respect them. >> correct. so what it would say is you have all of the states that have everything but marriage statutes being pushed over into marriage. because the argument is, that's irrational to give all the rights and benefits and burdens of marriage, but to withhold only the word "marriage." so, then, that would basically end civil unions, because i think states would get very leery about going too far down that path, lest they be pushed over the edge. but i think that civil unions have already seen the -- we've seen the dusk of civil unions already. i think gay people want full equality and they're not willing to settle for the middle of the bus as opposed to the front of the bus. >> is it possible that the ruling on this case tomorrow could hurt gay rights in the sense that it could roll back existing rights or make it harder to achieve forward progress that's already in motion? >> well, it could, in a sense of saying, we could get something like a byers versus hardwick case, a 1996 claim, that said there was no constitutional right to have privacy against laws that criminalize sodomy. and it took 17 years to get rid of that case. it could present a negative precedent, that says there's no constitutional right to same-sex marriage, and that could take a long time to get rid of.
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but even that kind of a decision would not preclude us going from state to state and flipping states one by one, under either a state constitutional provisions or through the legislature. >> so i know you're planning on going to oral arguments tomorrow. what do you expect to know after the oral arguments? what are you watching for? what should we be looking for when we release the tape, in terms of either tipping their hand about which way they're going to go, or what might be important in their ruling? >> one important thing to look for is the off-ramp, which is the big kind of standing issue, which is, are the right people bringing this case? so one of the ways in which the supreme court could kick this case, without having to reach the merits of the case, is to say, this case may be
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meritorious or not, but the wrong parties appealed this. it should have been the governor of california or the california attorney general, since they declined to appeal. the proponents of prop 8 are the ones that are the improper parties that are going to kick it and it guess back down to the district court and that could kick california and california only. listen for that procedural issue. another issue is how the court wrestles with this issue of political powerlessness you laid out earlier. on the one hand, you have 41 states that currently have restrictions on same-sex marriage, that do not allow same-sex marriage. on the other hand, you have polls like that abc/post poll that say 84% of americans are
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for same-sex marriage now. so what do we do with this? the other side of this, the proponents of prop 8 are going to argue that gays are so politically powerful, they don't need the special judicial solicitude that is offered by the court under this heightened scrutiny standard that plaintiffs are seeking. and the way to resolve this, i think, rachel, is to say, this is a paradox of political power in the supreme court. you have to have an enormous amount of political power before the court will deem you to be politically powerless. so the truly political powerless individuals in our society are not going to be on anyone's radar, including the supreme court. so unless we had had this enormous gay rights movement over many, many decades, we would never be at the court would have the question teed up before it whether gays are politically powerless or not. >> this is fascinating, followed by the doma cases, which are just as complicated, but also as far reach welcome the following day. i have absolutely no idea what's going to happen. the fact that chief justice john robert's lesbian cousin will be sitting in the audience tomorrow, hearing oral arguments as well, it's like the personal mix in all the middle of it. this is going to be an amazing one to watch. kenji, thank you so much for being here. kenji yoshina is a constitutional law professor. we've got lots more coming up tonight, including news of national significance in both dakotas. and i swear i'm not making that up and there are two separate stories. plus, what looks like basically an answer to a mystery that we covered on the show last
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week involving the murder of a state official in colorado. we've got some answers there. lots to come. stay with us. [ male announcer ] when you're at the corner of "multivitamin"
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nbc news can now confirm that senator tim johnson of south dakota is the latest senator to announce that he will not run for re-election in 2014. tim johnson is a three-term democratic senator. he's said to formally announce the news tomorrow. in terms of the political ramifications here, not only does this mean that the red state of south dakota will now have a senate seat open for the taking in 2014, it really does also raise the questions about the turnover rate in the senate right now, and whether that might have overall partisan complications for who has control o of that part of congress. tim johnson is the fifth senate democrat just in this cycle to announce he's not going to run for re-election next year. the others are tom harkin, frank lautenberg, carl levin, tim johnson, and jay rockefeller. so these are going to be open seats, five of them. and republicans only need to net six seats in total in order to take control of the senate in 2014. so that's the big news with national implications out of south dakota tonight.
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behold the conceived in rape tour. this was the group personhood usa. this is how they tried to convince voters in mississippi to legally block any woman in mississippi from having an abortion ever, under any circumstances, even if she got pregnant because she was raped. the conceived in rape tour was their argument for that abortion ban.
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their argument was that forcing rape victims to bear their rapist child against their will was a benefit of the law. it's not a bug, it's a feature. look what this would do! this was the argument they campaigned on. shockingly, it did not work. mississippi was not psyched about this prospect. mississippi voters said no to that abortion ban by a double-digit margin. now, the mississippi vote was not the first loss for personhood usa. they lost in colorado as well in 2008, when voters said no to the same kind of ban by nearly a three-to-one margin. they tried again in colorado two years later in 2010 and again they were defeated by a 40-point margin. they could not get it done. they had never been able to get it done. turns out voters aren't swayed by the conceived in rape idea. turns out voters do not want to ban all abortion and fertility treatments and hormonal birth control. that is what the personhood usa activists want, but americans broadly do not agree with that. and so now, the personhood usa folks have gotten more creative. or at least, they've gotten more
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focused. their focus less now on convincing the american people at large, since that's not working. instead, they are focusing on convincing elected republican state legislatures. and there they are having some success. a couple years ago in north dakota, the personhood people were trying to pass their a la mississippi abortion ban there. they were trying to pass through the legislature. and they found themselves blocked by a republican state senator. he's not a pro-choice republican state senator. he is an anti-abortion conservative republican. but, he said it was dumb to pass a state abortion ban when that's clearly illegal. it's unconstitutional. all it is is a guaranteed court case with all the accompanying expense, and a guaranteed smackdown of north dakota's law and no real advance in the policy. so he blocked the bill from going forward. he explained that what was really going on there was, quote, out of state extremists who have been working unsuccessfully for years in many states to pass similar legislation, want to challenge roe v. wade, and they want to
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put the taxpayers of north dakota on the hook for footing the bill. the aforementioned out of state extremists were in fact doing exactly that. and they responded to him blocking their bill by turfing him out of office. by supporting his opponent when he got redistricted. the personhood conceived in rape people took credit when that state senator lost his seat. quote, north dakota can serve as an example to politicians across america. no matter one's party affiliation, the grassroots personhood movement has promised to expose any action that stands in the way of legal protections for all children. personhood supporters have made good on that promise. that's them pounding their chests, right? that was last year's primary. the guy who blocked the unconstitutional waste of money abortion ban in the senate lose as his seat. he's gone. now, this year, the north dakota legislature has passed, in quick secession, a ban to bill
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abortion at six weeks, a bill to ban abortion at 20 weeks, a bill to close down the last abortion clinic in the state, a la, mississippi, same bill, same strategy. and once again, the old personhood total ban plus say bye-bye to the pills, say bye-bye to fertility treatment, the personhood thing will now go to the voters in north dakota, thanks to the legislature. it will go to the voters like it did in mississippi and in colorado, where it lost so badly. the other ones, the other bills that i mentioned, they are going to go to the north dakota governor, jack del rimple. these personhood guys were too extreme, by a long shot, for the voters of mississippi. but somehow they have the ear of the part of the republican party that is now running north dakota. the only question is whether north dakota's republican governor is going to let that stand. well, while the governor decides what he wants to do, whether he wants the taxpayers to actually foot the bill for this stuff, the other side of the argument has decided that they're not going to be shy. these photos that you're looking at here are from north dakota. in north dakota today, pro choice rallies were held all
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over the state, to oppose the anti-abortion landslide of legislation. yes, north dakota. rallies were held under the banner, stand up for women, north dakota. rallies in fargo and grand forks and minot and this one in the state capital of bismarck, north dakota, today, where the ap estimates more than 300 people turned out in cold conditions to urge the governor to veto these bills. in a sign that the personhood folks are weirding out at least some in the republican party in north dakota, there were even some republican lawmakers today who were among the pro choice protesters, asking the governor to please put a stop to this nonsense. one republican state representative told "the huffington post," quote, it's to say, hey, this isn't okay. we have stepped over the line. north dakota has not even passed a primary seat belt law, but we have the most invasive attack on women's health anywhere. we are spending an inordinate amount of time on social or personal issues, but we haven't done anything on property tax relief, higher education funding, fixing the roads. there are all kinds of other
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things we need to be doing besides this. ah, but this is what you are doing. what north dakota's elected republicans are doing, at least a majority of them, so far. you'll have to see what the governor decides to do in this case, and we promise to keep you posted on that. but joining us tonight for the interview tonight, is tammy cromoknocker, director of the red women river clinic, the only abortion clinic in north dakota. thank you for being here. i really appreciate it. >> thank you so much, rachel. >> we'll make a ringtone out of me saying that for you and you can put it on your cell phone, if you like. >> oh, dream come true! >> also really scary in the middle of the night. you have a lot to contend with this year. you have two different abortion bans, a third abortion ban set for a statewide vote. the tract law that targets just
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your clinic. i know you plan to fight most of this stuff. are you optimistic at all? do you think you'll win on any of these things? >> i have faith that the people on the south dakota ballot measure will do like we saw in mississippi and other states, and like we saw in the religious liberty amendment that we saw in the june primary. i really believe that north dakotaens will say, this is too much, this has gone too far. i am an optimist and i do believe, i'm hopeful that the governor will no both his constitutional oath and what a fellow governor, anti-choice governor did in 1991 and veto these bills. >> you operate the only clinic in the state. these bills are all targeting you, your place of business, and the clinic you run. do you feel like you're running up against the full force of your state's government? do you feel like you've got a big target on you? >> definitely.
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i think that the club of one clinic states has unfortunately grown. it used to just be north dakota, south dakota, and mississippi and now it includes arkansas and wyoming. and whenever you're the only state or when you're the only clinic in a state, you have that big target. and people, like you said, personhood usa, they view you as a big target. they want to make some state the first abortion-free state. unfortunately, what they don't realize is that even if they ban abortion, it just bans safe abortion. abortion will still happen. and so, it's frustrating when they do target us, because nobody's ever visited my clinic. no legislature has ever stepped foot inside my clinic and looked around, checked us out, looked at how beautiful the inside of the clinic is, talked to our patients. so that is frustrating to me, when we're such a target, but yet they talk about things as if they know what's going on in the clinic, but they've never visited it. >> now, you're not new to this. you've been working in this field in north dakota for, i
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think, about 20 years. you've been there through lots of legislative sessions. what's happening now? why does this year seem different in your perspective, in terms of the kinds anti-abortion legislation you're dealing with and the different political dynamics? >> you sort of touched on it earlier, with senator olson, who lost his seat in redistricting in the last session. personhood usa used him as an example. they said, look at what happens. when you mess with you, we'll mess with you. so i think it emboldened some of those who are against us to say, you know, if you mess with us, we're going to do this. and then, also, we have these big, huge budget surplus. we have billions in reserve, so nobody's afraid of spending north dakota money. and it's just kind of the perfect storm, where they feel like this is the right time, it's -- north dakota's the right place. and unfortunately, they're putting us on the map in this way, and it's just, i think, not in line with what regular north dakotans want for our state. >> tammy, specifically on the personhood ban that's now poised to appear on the ballot next year, so because of the
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legislature's action, it's going to go to the voters and then the voters will decide on it. when our producers, specifically, rebecca dryden, visited your clinic earlier this year, you talked to rebecca about this. you predicted that a personhood ban would pass the legislature in year. what made you so confident that it was coming? why did you see it? >> it's been around in the legislative session the last few times and, you know, it usually takes bills a couple of times to go forward, kind of fail, they figure out what works, what doesn't work. and they fit it in such a way that it's palatable to many different legislatures, on both sides of the republican and democratic house. and we just knew that it was their big push. this is really where they were going to go. and you can look at other states, like mississippi, colorado, and south dakota, you know. those are all the states where they feel like they've got a foothold and they really targeted some specific senators
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and representatives this year and we just knew it was coming. and so we knew that fight was going to happen and we're going to do the best we can to defeat it. >> you talked at the top of this interview about how the number of states that have only one clinic is growing. that it used to be north dakota and south dakota and mississippi. now it's the senate in arkansas, in wyoming, larger number of states. and as we have states with just one clinic, these outside groups that want to abolish access to abortion, even if they can't abolish the right on paper, put a target on all of these states to try to pressure those individual clinics out of business. that makes your status in north dakota not just a north dakota story, but a story of national importance. and people who see it that way, how do they -- how do they make this a national issue? i mean, the other side has made this a national issue. but is support for you a national issue too? can it be expressed in a way that is helpful the you? >> absolutely. and i think ever since the north dakota legislature has started down this path, our clinic has
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gotten e-mails, phone calls, letters from all over. we've gotten support from all over. i think the rallies all across the state today have shown that we have support in state and out of state. and i think that when you are a big target like these states, where there's only one clinic, not only are you the target who are opposed to the care that we offer, but we also have a lot of support from people who don't want to see a state fall. so we're hearing from people all over the country, and we have help from organizations like the center for reproductive rights, that might not step in in another state, where there's maybe 10, 12, 20 providers. so when you are a target, you have both sides working for you. and -- or, you know, against you, and for you. but those who are for you, sometimes you forget that those voices are out there.
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but in the last couple of months, it's just been overwhelming, the amount of support that we've gotten at the clinic and it's just been very heartening to us. >> seeing pro-choice rallies in four different sites in north dakota on a cold day, it's not the way that people around the country think about the politics of this in your state. so thanks for helping us understand it. tammy kromenaker, tammy, thanks so much for being here. >> thank you, rachel. thank you for having me. it is day one in the city of detroit today. and at least some parts of detroit are very, very mad about that. we've got the story and the tape of that, coming up. let's see what you got. rv -- covered. why would you pay for a hotel? i never do. motorcycles -- check. atv. i ride those. do you? no. boat. house.
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the answer. except that over time, emergency financial managers have not proven that they are the answer either. so why do we keep using them there? today was day one of the emergency financial manager takeover of the biggest city in michigan. and one of the biggest cities in the country. guess how it went? that's coming up. we're here! we're going to the park! [ gina ] oh hey, dan! i really like your new jetta! and you want to buy one like mine because it's so safe, right? yeah... yeah... i know what you've heard -- iihs top safety pick for $159 a month -- but, i wish it was more dangerous, like a monster truck or dune buggy! you can't have the same car as me! [ male announcer ] now everyone's going to want one. let's get a jetta. [ male announcer ] volkswagen springtoberfest is here and there's no better time to get a jetta. that's the power of german engineering. right now lease one of four volkswagen models for under $200 a month. visit vwdealer.com today. for under $200 a month. google's backyard for the wbing it on challenge.. [fight bell: ding, ding] what's your preferred search engine? search engine, uhh, probably google. if we do a side by side blind test comparison, and you end up choosing google, you get an xbox. i'll bet you the xbox, you bet me your son.
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we want everyone to hears tom's story to know that he lived his life believing in redemption and the ability of the human heart to be changed. he would want justice, certainly, but moreover, he would want forgiveness. our family prays for the family of the man who took tom's life, for god's mercy in their lives and for a way for them to find peace. >> that is lisa clements. she is the widow of colorado prison's chief, tom clements, who was shot to death last week as he answered the front door of their home in monument, colorado. mrs. clements today speaking at a huge memorial service, honoring her husband. in his tribute to the man he brought to the state two years ago to run colorado prisons, the state's governor, john hickenlooper, who you see here,
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said that tom clements believed, quote, at the core of his person, that anyone can be redeemed. in terms of the investigation into this murder, the immediate contextual question was whether it was questioned to tom clements' work in the prisons. could this have been random? could this have been personal? or could this have been related to his work in colorado's prisons, his work in the prisons in missouri before he came to colorado, could it have been connected to overall political issues in the state of colorado. the killing happened just hours before governor hickenlooper signed into law the state's contentious but historic new gun reform legislation. tom clements was a supporter of that legislation. and during the legislative debate over the gun control bills in colorado, criminal charges were brought against anti-gun control activists who had threatened to kill legislators and their family members, because the legislators supported the new reforms. in the wake of the tom clements murder last week, though, authorities are now drawing connections to another crime and to a suspect who is dead. when mr. clements was shot last week, witnesses told police they
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saw a boxy black car, possibly a lincoln or a cadillac near the crime scene just before the shooting. then two days after the shooting, a car fitting that description turned up in texas, hundreds of miles from the colorado crime scene. the driver of a black cadillac with reportedly mismatched colorado license plates opened fire on a sheriff's deputy who tried to pull him over on a routine traffic stop. during and after a 100-mile-an-hour high-speed chase. that ended in a crash with an 18 wheeler, the driver shot at the officers pursuing him. when they fired back, the shooter was seriously wounded and died later that day in a texas hospital. today, el paso county sheriff's office says after examining shell casings from both crime scenes in texas and colorado, ballistics experts concluded the gun used in the texas firefight is the same weapon used to kill colorado prisons chief tom clements.
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he's also a suspect in the killing of this man. among the items in the car are reported to be a dominoes pizza carrier bag and dominoes pizza jacket with more weapons and more ammunition. and along with quote, several forms of correspondence with an unknown or unidentified suspect who might be involved in the case. so whether there was more than one person involved in this murder of the colorado prisons chief remains to be scene. the suspect that shot police with the weapon, the same weapon that killed tom clements, that suspect is this man, a 28-year-old colorado parolee, evan ebel. he is identified as a member of a white supremacist colorado prison gang, in and out of prison the past decade, released recently in january. his family says he was locked up
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in solitary confinement most of the time imprisoned and they say it had destroyed him mentally. his signature issue as prison chief was reducing use of solitary confinement in that state. there's a lot authorities don't know about the case, including a motive, how the suspect got that gun, and whether he acted alone. we will keep you posted. [ kitt ] you know what's impressive? a talking car. but i'll tell you what impresses me. a talking train. this ge locomotive can tell you exactly where it is, what it's carrying, while using less fuel. delivering whatever the world needs, when it needs it. ♪ after all, what's the point of talking if you don't have something important to say? ♪
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michigan's republican governor rick snyder overruled local voting rights thus far in flint, michigan, in allen park, in school districts of muskegon heights and highland park and benton harbor, taking away power of local elected officials there. he relieved those towns of their democracy because he said they were too broken to be trusted to use it any more. instead of being allowed to choose their own locally elected officials, rick snyder instead installed a single state appointed emergency manager who has unilateral, unelected power. then two weeks ago, governor rick snyder decided the state would take over detroit, too, take over the state's largest city. democracy had to go in detroit, just as it had in all of the other smaller places. today was takeover day in detroit. motor city, meet your new unelected boss, this guy, on the emergency manager's first day on the job, detroit residents
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decided instead of just slowing traffic in their own city in protest, they would charter a couple of buses to take their case to cleveland, specifically to the headquarters of the new emergency manager's law firm. that law firm not only supplied the emergency manager who now has unilateral control of the city. the same firm is also reportedly the leading contender to get the job of restructuring detroit's finances. so it doesn't matter who the residents of detroit voted for to represent them. that's being overruled in favor of putting their fate in the hands of this cleveland law firm. and that's not sitting well with all of detroit. detroit residents also gathered today at the statue known as the spirit of detroit, they noted that michigan voters repealed the emergency manager law in november, only to have republicans pass a new one weeks later. this has not sat well with them, and neither has losing their local democracy. >> to go to the extent where you would deny somebody the fundamental right to participate, to elect the puic